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. 1993 Feb 15;212(1):95-9.
doi: 10.1111/j.1432-1033.1993.tb17637.x.

The role of the Crabtree effect and an endogenous fuel in the energy metabolism of resting and proliferating thymocytes

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The role of the Crabtree effect and an endogenous fuel in the energy metabolism of resting and proliferating thymocytes

M Guppy et al. Eur J Biochem. .
Free article

Abstract

Rat thymocytes have been used to characterize the changes in energy metabolism that occur as cells undergo a resting/proliferation transition. In the resting state, anaerobic ATP production accounts for only 4% of ATP turnover. The remainder is fueled by the oxidation of a mixture of an unidentified endogenous fuel (62%), glucose (18%) and glutamine (16%). 48 h after mitogen stimulation, the ATP turnover has increased twofold. In these proliferating cells, glucose inhibits oxygen consumption by 58%, indicating a profound Crabtree effect which is not present in resting cells. Consequently, proliferating cells, in the presence of glucose and glutamine, fuel the majority (61%) of ATP turnover anaerobically, producing lactate from glucose. The development of a Crabtree effect may be the result of the 8-10-fold increase in glycolytic enzyme activities which occurs with proliferation. Possible advantages of such a proliferative metabolism are a sparing of endogenous fuel, and a minimizing of oxidative metabolism, with its concurrent production of free radicals.

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